http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-s-goodman/world-economic-forum-global-financial-crisis-davos_b_1239074.html

by Peter S. Goodman

At World Economic Forum, Fear of Global Contagion Dominates
Posted: 01/28/2012 12:34 pm

DAVOS, Switzerland -- They came, they feasted on smoked sturgeon and 
black truffle risotto, drank liquor paid for by global banks, endured 
dozens of security checks, and tried not to fall down in the snow. They 
talked about the perilous state of the global economy and the future of 
capitalism. Then, they headed back to their home countries -- many in 
chauffeured limousines, some by private jet.

But as the people who run much of the planet wrapped up the annual 
festival of influence known as the World Economic Forum on Saturday, any 
sense of achievement was hard to discern. The participants arrived amid 
elevated unemployment in many economies, worries about government budget 
deficits, and fears that contagion from a financial crisis in Europe 
could infect the rest of the world. They went home with all of these 
worries intact, and perhaps reinforced.

Nouriel Roubini, the economist who -- not for nothing -- is known as 
"Doctor Doom," noted that world leaders are divided on a great array of 
crucial issues, from arguments over trade imbalances and currency 
valuations to the threats posed by Iran and North Korea and the 
challenge of climate change.

"On all these issues that require international coordination, there is 
no agreement," he said during a Saturday morning panel. "It's a world of 
chaos that can lead to potential conflicts."

European officials confronted a palpable sense of impatience and 
resentment from their counterparts, drawing accusations that they have 
imperiled the fate of the globe by repeatedly failing to prop up ailing 
member states.

In private conversations here this week, senior officials from the 
United States, Europe and Asia expressed a mixture of resignation and 
alarm that Greece may yet default on its government debts, despite 
several efforts by eurozone members to cobble together a credible 
rescue. Some warned that such an outcome could spook investors into 
pulling funds out of larger economies such as Italy and Spain, raising 
the prospect of defaults in those countries. A few suggested this could 
eventually trigger the breakup of the eurozone and the end of its shared 
currency, an event that could produce panic rivaling that seen after the 
investment banking giant Lehman Brothers collapsed more than three years 
ago.

In a riveting address here on Saturday, Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang 
recalled his place at the epicenter of the Asian financial crisis in the 
late 1990s, and the experience of the 2008 global credit pullback, 
asserting that the current situation is worse.

"I've never been as scared as now about the world, what is happening in 
Europe," he said.

Hong Kong faces little direct exposure to potential defaults on European 
government bonds, Tsang added, but the global financial system is now so 
interconnected that this confers no protection. He wondered aloud about 
the health of financial institutions that trade with Hong Kong's banks 
and the potential for trouble rippling out from the eurozone.

"We do not know how deep this hole will be when the whole thing implodes 
on us," he said. "Nobody is immune."

Tsang merely voiced publicly -- if stridently -- the same perspectives 
expressed privately in recent days by his counterparts on multiple 
continents. He urged European leaders to demonstrate a sense of 
responsibility as global citizens, accusing them of putting the world's 
economy at risk by failing marshal a plausibly large rescue fund. He 
contrast this with Hong Kong's own brush with crisis more than a decade ago.

"We were very much left to ourselves, and we overcame it," Tsang said. 
"In Europe now, you need decisive action, you need overkill. You need to 
inspire confidence. That confidence must come in the decisive action of 
government, working together. And do it quickly."

But conversations here this week only underscored the sense that Europe 
is politically incapable of acting in unison. Though the eurozone shares 
a common currency, it is comprised of 17 different countries with 
often-sharp differences over policy -- not to mention history, 
tradition, culture and language.

Many experts have called for the issuance of Euro bonds by the European 
Central Bank and backed by the credit of member countries as the most 
powerful way to demonstrate the community's resolve toward supporting 
troubled members. Germany has consistently opposed such proposals, 
unwilling to direct its prodigious savings at saving members it views as 
profligate -- not least, Greece.

"You spend money you don't have on the bills of others, and that's the 
wrong incentive in a functioning market economy," German finance 
minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said earlier in the week, shooting down a 
question about Euro bonds. "At the end, you have to pay your bills. If 
you spend at the risk of others, it's a strong temptation. Everyone will 
fail on this temptation. That would be the wrong method in fighting the 
causes of the current crisis."

Among policymakers and investors alike, the sense has taken hold that a 
pair of European rescue funds -- collectively holding perhaps $1 
trillion in lending capacity -- are insufficient to assuage the market's 
fears. Bailing out Spain and Italy could absorb four times that sum, 
according to Roubini.

Many European officials are hoping to receive an expanded assist from 
the International Monetary Fund, a once unthinkable prospect for an 
institution traditionally employed to support developing countries 
facing crises.

The fund's managing director, Christine Lagarde, has been seeking to 
drum up a fresh $500 billion to attack the crisis, using Davos as an 
elaborate fundraising platform.

"The IMF is a tool, but we need to have a toolkit," Lagarde told forum 
participants Saturday morning, later holding up her purse as a prop. 
"I'm here with my little bag to actually collect a bit of money."

But that request has received a cool reception from major fund 
shareholders. The United States, the IMF's largest contributor, has 
signaled unwillingness to allow more fund finances to flow to Europe 
until the eurozone deploys its own resources toward an aggressive 
rescue. Japan's economic policy minister Matohisa Furukawa echoed that 
position on Saturday.

"Speaking of the role of the IMF, I think that the most important thing 
is Europe itself make utmost efforts," he said. "Then, IMF can support 
the European countries."

Underlying the debate over whether and how Europe can erect an effective 
firewall are deeper doubts about the continent's ability to grow. As 
many states address budget deficits, they are cutting spending and 
pressuring labor to accept lower wages -- measures that sap their 
economies of spending power. Slow growth itself tightens financial 
straits by reducing government revenues, prompting investors to take 
their money elsewhere, which raises borrowing costs.

"The eurozone is going to be in recession this year," said Robert 
Shiller, the Yale economist who warned of both the technology and 
housing bubbles in the United States. "The U.S. may not. The world may 
not. It's not going to be a great year, though."

The one source of cheerier conversation here this week has been the 
relatively strong growth in so-called emerging markets, such as China, 
India, Brazil and Turkey. But these economies have been slowing in 
recent months. Now, concerns about Europe's problems are amplifying 
concerns.

A weak Europe translates into fewer orders for goods from developing 
countries. As European banks seek to bolster their balance sheets, they 
are pulling funds out of developing economies and bringing them home -- 
a trend that could prevent even healthy firms in fast-growing markets 
from getting their hands on cash needed to expand and hire, further 
crimping growth.

"You're going to see a credit contraction as the banks pull back," World 
Bank President Robert Zoellick warned.

All of which means that as the masters of finance and heads of 
government filter out of this ski resort in the Swiss Alps, the anxiety 
gnawing at the global economy continues unchecked. The damage could run 
beyond an economic slowdown, further undermining public faith in the 
institutions that now govern modern life.

For decades, as crises have assailed developing countries from Indonesia 
to Argentina, the powers-that-be in the United States and Europe have 
counseled orthodox advice: Get your fiscal house in order; live within 
your means; act decisively and resolutely. Yet now that crisis is 
hitting the wealthy world, leaders are avoiding the hardest decisions 
and hoping to muddle through -- all while exporting their afflictions to 
multiple shores.

"This has got to have effects on influence, perceptions of power in the 
world that are going to be quite significant for years to come," 
Zoellick said. "Whatever we see come out over the course of this year 
and the next year, the world is never going to go back to the way it was."

Follow Peter S. Goodman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/petersgoodman

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to